| Page 438 883 F.2d 438
Raymond Alton PRIDDY,
Plaintiff-Appellant, (88-1299),
v.
Asher B. EDELMAN, et al.,
Defendants-Appellees.
Martin WARSHOFSKY, et al.,
Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
FRUEHAUF CORPORATION, et al.,
Defendants-Appellees,
Raymond Alton Priddy, Objector-Appellant,
(88-1867). Nos. 88-1299, 88-1867. United States Court of Appeals,
Sixth Circuit. Argued May 16, 1989.
Decided July 28, 1989.
Page 439
Sidney B. Silverman (argued),
Harold B. Obstfeld, Silverman & Harnes, New
York City, Richard E. Shaw, Richard G.
Parchoc, Lopatin, Miller, Freedman,
Bluestone, Erlich & Rosen, Detroit, Mich.,
for appellant.
Richard D. Greenfield, Haverford,
Pa., Gene A. Farber, Craig, Farber, Downs &
Dise, P.C., Detroit, Mich., Stuart D.
Wechsler (argued), Goodkind, Wechsler &
Labator, New York City, Robert M. Kornreich
(argued), Wolf, Popper, Ross, Wolk & Jones,
New York City, for plaintiffs-appellees.
Kenneth M. Kramer (argued),
Shearman & Sterling, Barbara J. Gould, New
York City, Justin G. Klimko, William M.
Saxton, Butzel, Long, Gust, Klein & Van
Zile, Detroit, Mich., W. Merritt Jones, Jr.,
Hill, Lewis, Adams, Goodrich & Tait, James
K. Robinson, Ronald Longhofer, Honigman,
Miller, Schwartz & Cohn, Detroit, Mich.,
William R. Norfolk (argued), William L.
Farris, Sullivan & Cromwell, New York City,
Gregory Curtner, Miller, Canfield, Paddock &
Stone, Detroit, Mich., Martin Flumenbaum
(argued), Jeh Johnson, Paul, Weiss, Rifkind,
Wharton & Garrison, New York City, Andrew M.
Zack, Barris, Scott, Denn & Driker, Detroit,
Mich., Dennis Glazer, Davis, Polk & Wardell,
New York City, for defendants-appellees.
Before MILBURN and NELSON,
Circuit Judges, and PECK, Senior Circuit
Judge.
DAVID A. NELSON, Circuit Judge.
These cases arise out of a
contest for control of Fruehauf Corporation,
a major producer of truck trailers and cargo
containers. Both actions originated as
shareholder suits challenging the
corporation's acquisition by a group of
inside and outside investors.
Page 440
Case No. 88-1299 comes before us
on appeal from a district court order
entering summary judgment against the
plaintiff on all of the claims in the
original complaint and denying leave to file
an amended complaint. We conclude that
summary judgment was proper on the common
law claims set forth in the original
complaint and that the district court did
not abuse its discretion when it denied
leave to file an amended complaint. The
federal securities law claim pleaded in the
original complaint has, we believe, been
abandoned.
Case No. 88-1867 has been
settled, but an objecting shareholder has
appealed from the district court's order
approving the settlement. (The plaintiff in
No. 88-1299 is the objector in No. 88-1867.)
The parties agree that there is no basis for
disturbing the district court's approval of
the settlement in No. 88-1867 as fair and
equitable unless this court reverses the
judgment of the district court in No.
88-1299. Having concluded that the judgment
in the latter case must be affirmed, we
shall affirm the settlement order in the
companion case.
I
In February and March of 1986 an
investor group led by Asher Edelman bought a
large block of shares in Fruehauf
Corporation, a Michigan corporation, with
the stated intention of attempting a
friendly takeover of the corporation. The
holdings of the Edelman group approached 10
percent of Fruehauf's outstanding common
stock, which consisted of over 21 million
shares. The stock traded in the mid-$20
range. On June 11, 1986, after efforts to
negotiate a friendly takeover had failed to
bear fruit, the Edelman group made a tender
offer for all Fruehauf shares at $44 per
share.
Shortly thereafter a group
composed of existing Fruehauf management,
Merrill Lynch Capital Markets, LMC Holdings,
Inc., and others (a group to which we shall
refer collectively as "the Merrill group")
announced a tender offer of its own. The
Merrill group offered $48.50 per share for
about 77 percent of the outstanding shares
of the corporation. The tender offer
formally commenced on June 27, 1986, after
approval by Fruehauf's board of directors.
The directors agreed to commit $100 million
in corporate funds toward financing the deal
and agreed to a "no shop" clause restricting
negotiations with other possible bidders.
The Edelman group immediately
sought a federal court injunction against
the Merrill group's tender offer. On July
24, 1986, the district court enjoined
implementation of any aspect of the plan
"except as ... ordered by this Court," and
ordered a bidding contest for control of
Fruehauf.
Plaza Securities Co. v. Fruehauf Corp., 643
F.Supp. 1535 (E.D.Mich.1986). We
affirmed the district court's injunction,
with certain modifications not relevant
here.
Edelman v. Fruehauf Corp.,
798 F.2d 882 (6th
Cir.1986).
A shareholder action had been
filed on June 27, 1986, by one Martin
Warshofsky on behalf of a putative class of
Fruehauf shareholders. The goal of this
lawsuit was to force an auction for control
of the corporation. A similar class action
was filed on July 7, 1986, by shareholder
William Steiner and others.
A special committee of Fruehauf's
outside directors was formed to oversee the
court-ordered bidding contest. The committee
imposed a deadline of August 18, 1986. On
that date the Edelman group proposed a cash
tender offer of $49.50 per share for about
10,900,000 shares, to be followed by a
merger in which holders of the remaining
shares would receive $51 in cash or
preferred stock in a new corporation. The
Merrill group adhered to its earlier
proposal of $48.50 per share for 17,500,000
shares and $48.50 in cash or a package of
securities for the remaining shares. The
special committee's outside financial
advisors, Kidder Peabody and Salomon
Brothers, were unable to recommend one plan
over the other; further negotiations were
therefore conducted.
In the course of these
discussions it became apparent that the
Edelman group was not prepared to increase
its offer, while the Merrill group was
willing to consider increasing its offer if
a settlement could be worked out with the
Edelman
Page 441 group. A proposal emerged under which the
Edelman group would release any claim it
might have against the Merrill group and the
Merrill group would buy all of the Edelman
group's roughly two million shares at $49
per share and would pay "expenses" of about
$21 million said to have been incurred by
the Edelman group in connection with the
takeover contest. The Merrill group would
then commence a cash tender offer for
14,575,000 shares at $49.50 per share, with
the remaining shares to be exchanged in the
second step of the transaction for $49.50 in
cash or a package of securities.
The special committee's financial
advisors valued the August 18 Edelman group
offer at between $45 and $48.50 per share
overall, the August 18 Merrill group offer
at between $46.25 and $48.25 per share
overall, and the revised Merrill group offer
at between $47.50 and $49.25 per share
overall. They recommended that the special
committee approve the latest offer of the
Merrill group. On the morning of August 22,
after unanimous endorsement of the new plan
by Fruehauf's special committee and the
company's full board of directors, the
Edelman and Merrill groups executed a
purchase agreement under which the Edelman
group's shares were sold on the agreed
terms. A settlement agreement under which
the Edelman group released its claims
against Fruehauf and the Merrill group was
also executed.
The details of the new tender
offer were publicly announced that same day.
Following consultations with the plaintiffs
in the Warshofsky and Steiner actions, it
was agreed that the plaintiffs in those
cases would be permitted to continue
discovery with a view toward settlement if
the discovery showed that the Merrill group
offer was fair to the common shareholders.
The tender offer was formally commenced on
August 28.
On September 17, 1986, another
shareholder, Raymond Priddy, filed a
complaint asserting various claims similar
to those advanced in the Warshofsky and
Steiner actions. Mr. Priddy did not seek an
injunction against completion of the
takeover, and the second step of the merger
was completed on December 28, 1986.
While discovery was proceeding in
the Warshofsky and Steiner actions, the
defendants moved for summary judgment in the
Priddy action. On December 7, 1987, without
responding to the summary judgment motion,
Priddy filed a cross-motion for summary
judgment and moved for leave to serve an
amended complaint.
The district court granted the
defendants' motions for summary judgment,
denied the plaintiff's cross-motion, and
denied the motion for leave to serve an
amended complaint.
Priddy v. Edelman,
679 F.Supp. 1425
(E.D.Mich.1988). The district court
noted that Mr. Priddy's motion for leave to
amend was untimely under the terms of a
pretrial order that had been entered some
time before, and the court based its ruling
on that ground. 679 F.Supp. at 1430. The
court then went on to examine the various
new theories that the plaintiff proposed to
introduce into the case and found that the
proposed amendment would be futile in any
event.
The Warshofsky and Steiner
plaintiffs were satisfied, after discovery,
that the terms of the takeover were fair to
the common shareholders. On March 28, 1988,
the parties in those cases asked the
district court to certify the following
plaintiff class for purposes of settlement:
"all persons and entities, other than
defendants in the [Warshofsky and Steiner
actions] and Asher B. Edelman and persons
who acted in concert with him in his efforts
to acquire control of Fruehauf Corporation
..., who owned Fruehauf Corporation common
stock of record or beneficially at any time
from March 10, 1986 to December 23, 1986
(the 'Settlement Class Period') and their
successors in interest, immediate and
remote, direct and indirect."
Under the terms of the
settlement, (1) the Warshofsky and Steiner
actions would be dismissed with prejudice,
(2) the defendants would pay plaintiffs'
attorney fees in the amount of $400,000, and
(3) members of the class would release a
long list of possible defendants (including
all defendants in the
Page 442 Priddy action except for the Edelman
defendants) from
"any and all liability under each and
every claim asserted in [the Warshofsky and
Steiner ] actions and any and all claims
(including, without limitation, claims for
breach of any fiduciary duty, fraud, or
violation of federal securities law or
regulations, or of contributing to, or
aiding and abetting any wrongdoing) that
have been, may be, or could be asserted by
reason of any matter, transaction, event,
statement, omission, negotiation, offer or
agreement relating to any effort to acquire
control of Fruehauf during the Settlement
Class Period ... by any member of the
Settlement Class in this Court or in any
other Court, administrative body or tribunal
or arbitration panel of any ...
jurisdiction...."
As required by Rule 23,
Fed.R.Civ.P., members of the settlement
class were notified of the terms of the
proposed settlement, of their right "to
object to the Settlement or be excluded from
the Class," and of the procedures governing
such objections or requests for exclusion.
(Emphasis added.) Unlike several other
shareholders, Mr. Priddy never requested
exclusion from the class. He did file
objections to the proposed compromise,
arguing that the return per share under the
proposed settlement was not superior to the
return available under other alternatives,
that there was no new consideration for the
plaintiff class's release of claims, and
that there was no adequate consideration for
Priddy's release of his individual claims.
The district court overruled the objections
and approved the settlement.
Steiner v. Fruehauf Corp., 121 F.R.D. 304
(E.D.Mich.1988).
Mr. Priddy now appeals to this
court, arguing that because the district
court's approval of the Warshofsky
compromise was based on its dismissal of
Priddy's individual claims, a reversal in
Priddy must necessarily lead to a reversal
in Warshofsky as well. He does not raise the
other objections to the compromise that he
pressed below.
II
Before Mr. Priddy appealed from
the district court's approval of the
Warshofsky settlement, various defendants in
the Priddy action filed substantially
identical motions in this court "to dismiss
or stay this appeal ... without prejudice to
renewal only in the event of a timely appeal
from and reversal of the Order and Final
Judgment entered on July 20, 1988" approving
the Warshofsky settlement. (Emphasis added.)
In support of their motions to dismiss or
stay the appeal, the defendants make two
arguments. The defendants contend first that
the district court's approval of the
Warshofsky settlement somehow precludes this
court's consideration of the merits of the
appeal from the earlier dismissal of the
Priddy action. Although the trial judgment
in Warshofsky would have the effect of
barring Mr. Priddy and others bound by the
settlement from bringing new lawsuits based
on the same sequence of events, the judgment
cannot deprive us of appellate jurisdiction
over a pending appeal from a preexisting
judgment. As the Court of Appeals for the
Ninth Circuit held in a similar case, "the
latter order can scarcely constitute a bar
to the instant action, decided below on an
earlier date."
Flood v. Harrington, 532 F.2d 1248, 1250
(9th Cir.1976).
The defendants also argue that
because Mr. Priddy voluntarily remained a
member of the settlement class, rather than
exercising his right to opt out and pursue
individual claims, he is bound by the
district court's approval of the settlement
class's release of claims like Mr. Priddy's.
But the Warshofsky settlement, by its terms,
did not purport to release Priddy's claims
against the Edelman defendants, so we must
at the very least consider the district
court's disposition of the claims against
the Edelman defendants. Because Mr. Priddy's
appeal in No. 88-1867 is explicitly premised
upon winning his appeal in No. 88-1299, we
shall consider the merits of the appeal in
No. 88-1299 first. The defendants' motions
to dismiss that appeal will be denied.
Page 443
III
We begin by reviewing the
district court's dismissal of the claims
asserted in the plaintiff's original
complaint.
A
The plaintiff's complaint alleged
that the Fruehauf directors violated their
fiduciary duties in the following manner:
"23. Defendant Edelman, on
[August 18, 1986], proposed a joint tender
offer with Fruehauf for 10,925,652 shares at
$49.50 to be followed by a merger in which
Fruehauf stockholders would receive, at
Defendant Edelman's option, cash or
securities worth $51 per share ('Edelman
Group Fifth Offer').
24. The Edelman Group Fifth Offer
was the highest offer received by the
Special Committee, and such offer should
have been accepted by the
Director-Defendants. Instead, the Special
Committee, with the assistance of the
Merrill-Lynch Defendants, Edelman Group
Defendants, and Defendant Kidder, engaged in
a course of conduct described below [i.e.,
developing and acquiescing in the August 22
plan], the consummation of which constituted
a violation of ... the common law fiduciary
duty owed to the Fruehauf shareholders...."
The district court disposed of
this common law breach of fiduciary duty
claim under the business judgment rule. The
defendant directors, the court held, were
entitled to the benefit of "a presumption
that directors have acted in accordance with
their fiduciary obligations 'on an informed
basis, in good faith, and in the honest
belief that the action taken was in the best
interest of the company.' " 679 F.Supp. at
1434 (quoting
Aronson v. Lewis, 473 A.2d 805, 812
(Del.1984)).
In re Estate of Butterfield, 418 Mich. 241,
255-56, 341 N.W.2d 453, 458-59 (1983).
The plaintiff failed to rebut that
presumption. The undisputed evidence showed
that the directors had acted only on the
careful and well-reasoned advice of
financial advisors of the highest caliber,
and that in the opinion of all concerned the
offer of the Merrill group provided the
greatest value that was available. The court
declined to substitute its judgment for that
of the directors on this question.
Mr. Priddy argues that the
business judgment rule applies only where
the directors have exercised due care and
that the quick approval of the Merrill plan
shows a lack of due care. We are not
persuaded that any such lack of care was
shown. Although matters moved quickly in
this case, the special committee of outside
directors was unwilling to take action
without the opinions of reputable outside
financial advisors. When the advisors were
unable to recommend a choice as between the
two plans submitted by the August 18
deadline, the special committee refused to
endorse either plan and insisted on further
talks. Intensive negotiations followed, and
both financial advisors concluded that the
new plan which emerged from those talks was
superior to either of the earlier offers.
The directors' rejection of the
bidders' initial offers, close consultation
with two carefully selected outside
financial advisors, and insistence on
further negotiations all bespeak diligence
and care. Mr. Priddy points to nothing in
the record, other than the compressed time
period during which these events occurred,
in support of the argument that the
directors failed to use due care. Had the
directors not moved quickly, there is reason
to believe that the deal might have fallen
through, leaving the shareholders worse off.
Fruehauf's earnings were falling, and both
bidders were starting to get cold feet. We
do not think that Mr. Priddy has shown the
existence of any genuine issue of material
fact on the question of whether the
directors exercised the requisite degree of
care, assuming that the district court was
correct in holding the business judgment
rule applicable.
The Delaware cases
*
accord directors' decisions in conducting
auctions of corporate
Page 444 control considerable deference unless there
is some indication that the directors are
"playing favorites with the contending
factions."
Revlon, Inc. v. MacAndrews & Forbes
Holdings, Inc., 506 A.2d 173, 184 (Del.1986);
see also In re J.P. Stevens & Co., 542 A.2d
770, 780-81 (Del.Ch.1988) (special
committee's decisions in conducting auction
reviewed under business judgment rule if
decisions made in good faith and with due
care), appeal refused, 540 A.2d 1088
(Del.1988);
City Capital Associates Limited Partnership
v. Interco, Inc., 551 A.2d 787, 802
(Del.Ch.1988) ("Even when the
corporation is clearly 'for sale,' a
disinterested board or committee maintains
the right and the obligation to exercise
business judgment in pursuing the
stockholders' interest."), appeal dismissed,
556 A.2d 1070 (Del.1988).
Having effectively put Fruehauf
on the auction block, the directors assumed
the role of "auctioneers charged with
getting the best price for the stockholders
at a sale of the company." Revlon, 506 A.2d
at 182. We see no indication in the record
that the court-ordered auction was conducted
in a biased way or that the directors
sacrificed or ignored the interests of the
common shareholders.
Unocal Corp. v. Mesa Petroleum Corp., 493
A.2d 946, 955 (Del.1985). "If the board
of directors is disinterested, has acted in
good faith and with due care, its decision
in the absence of an abuse of discretion
will be upheld as a proper exercise of
business judgment." Id. at 957; see also
Revlon, 506 A.2d at 182 (noting that
directors' actions in running auction are
evaluated under standard set out in Unocal
). Thus we agree with the district court
that the directors' approval of the offer of
the Merrill group must be evaluated under
the business judgment rule and not the more
stringent "entire fairness" standard.
In granting summary judgment on
this claim, the district court cited "[t]he
uncertainties which had been raised by the
Edelman August 18th offer, and [Edelman's]
unwillingness to offer further assurances,"
as well as the advice of both of the
Fruehauf directors' financial advisors that
the Merrill offer of August 22 was the best
deal for the shareholders. 679 F.Supp. at
1434. The second step of the Edelman offer
of August 18 was particularly risky. The
proposed $51 per share buyout in cash or
nominally equivalent securities was
contingent on corporate assets being sold
quickly enough and at a high enough price to
raise sufficient cash to make the payments.
The Edelman group refused to commit itself
to any definite timetable for completing the
liquidations necessary to finance the second
step of the takeover. As the district court
noted, there was considerable doubt as to
whether Fruehauf's remaining operations
could produce enough revenue to service the
debt that the company would have to take on
to finance the $51 per share payout. Id. at
1428. As noted above, both outside financial
advisors recommended the revised Merrill
offer over the earlier Merrill offer or the
Edelman offer. The directors' decision was
an informed one, made in good faith and with
the honest belief that the action taken was
in the best interest of the shareholders,
Aronson, 473 A.2d at 812, and it is
therefore entitled to a presumption of
regularity.
Mr. Priddy also argues that the
directors violated their fiduciary duties by
approving a plan under which certain
shareholders (the Edelman group defendants)
stood to be reimbursed for claimed expenses,
thereby realizing a higher per share return
than other shareholders. This does not
appear to be the basis of the breach of
fiduciary duty claim alleged in the
complaint, or even the basis on which the
claim was fought out in the district court.
But we cannot accept the argument in any
event. In effect, Mr. Priddy argues that the
directors were obligated, as fiduciaries, to
reject the Merrill plan and wait to see if
another offer
Page 445 came along under which all shareholders
would be treated identically. We think the
Michigan courts would be inclined to allow
corporate directors considerable leeway in
making such decisions. As we have already
seen, it was by no means clear that any
better offers would be forthcoming, given
Fruehauf's sagging earnings and the mounting
costs of the takeover battle. It seems to us
that the directors acted within their
considerable discretion in deciding to
follow the counsel of their advisors,
approve the Merrill offer, and avoid the
risk of complete collapse of the bidding
process. Our resolution of this question as
a matter of Michigan corporate law has no
bearing, of course, on the proper resolution
of any federal securities law challenge to
such an agreement.
Because summary judgment was
appropriate on the underlying breach of duty
claims against the directors, the related
aiding and abetting breach of duty claims
asserted against the other defendants
necessarily fail as well.
B
Mr. Priddy's complaint also seeks
damages for alleged violations of the
district court's earlier injunction, as
modified by this court. Mr. Priddy had not
specified precisely how the Fruehauf
directors' actions are supposed to have
violated the injunction. Throughout this
litigation, the parties and the district
court have treated the injunction violation
claim as little more than a variation of the
breach of fiduciary duty claim. This is
hardly surprising, since the injunctive
order amounts, in large part, to an
elaboration of the scope of the directors'
fiduciary duty to the shareholders. For
example, the directors were "ordered to
refrain from taking any corporate actions
which are intended to or have the effect of
favoring or advantaging any particular
bidder over any other bidder" and "enjoined
from any further breaches of their fiduciary
duties to Fruehauf's shareholders in
connection with the contest for control."
798 F.2d at 890-91. Having concluded that
the plaintiff has no viable breach of
fiduciary duty claim, we conclude, for
substantially the same reasons, that he has
no viable claim for breach of the injunction
ordering the defendants not to violate their
fiduciary duties.
C
The original complaint also
contained a breach of fiduciary duty claim
against the Edelman defendants. The gist of
this claim was that the Edelman defendants
somehow violated a duty to other Fruehauf
shareholders by accepting a higher per share
price than the price received by their
fellow shareholders.
At no time during 1986 did the
Edelman group own more than 9.3 percent of
the total outstanding Fruehauf shares. Mr.
Priddy cannot claim, and we do not
understand him to argue, that the source of
the Edelman defendants' alleged fiduciary
duty towards the other Fruehauf shareholders
was the Edelman group's position as a
majority or controlling shareholder.
Minority shareholders owe no fiduciary duty
to fellow shareholders.
Gilbert v. El Paso Co., 490 A.2d 1050, 1055
(Del.Ch.1984). Mr. Priddy asserts,
rather, that:
"The Edelman Group Defendants, by
commencing litigation for the benefit of the
Fruehauf shareholders, assumed a fiduciary
role. They were not free to obtain a benefit
for themselves to the detriment of the
Shareholders."
This argument makes no sense; the
interests of the two groups, as the district
court observed, were "diametrically
opposed." 679 F.Supp. at 1430. The Edelman
group's lawsuit was commenced for the
benefit of the members of that group, not
for the benefit of the Fruehauf shareholders
at large. The action was brought to further
the Edelman group's end of acquiring a
controlling block of Fruehauf shares at the
lowest possible price. The interest of
shareholders such as Mr. Priddy was to sell
to the Edelman group or others at the
highest possible price.
The sole authority cited by the
plaintiff in this connection is
Young v. Higbee Co., 324 U.S. 204, 65 S.Ct.
594, 89 L.Ed. 890 (1945). Young was a
bankruptcy case involving two creditors
whose "sale" of their
Page 446 right to appeal from the bankruptcy court's
approval of a reorganization plan had the
effect, under bankruptcy law, of barring
other creditors from challenging the
reorganization plan. Young does not apply
where, as here, the settlement of a case by
the plaintiffs would have no res judicata
effect on other potential litigants.
Pearson v. Ecological Science Corp., 522
F.2d 171, 178 (5th Cir.1975), cert.
denied, 425 U.S. 912, 96 S.Ct. 1508, 47
L.Ed.2d 762 (1976). Because the Edelman
group owed Mr. Priddy no fiduciary duty, the
breach of fiduciary duty claim against the
Edelman defendants was properly rejected by
the district court.
D
The complaint also alleged that
the defendants had violated the "best price
rule" of Sec. 14(d)(7) of the Williams Act,
15 U.S.C. Sec. 78n(d)(7), by paying the
Edelman group shareholders more total
consideration per share (counting the
reimbursement for expenses as consideration)
than other shareholders. On appeal, however,
the plaintiff's opening brief framed the
"best price rule" challenge exclusively in
terms of the Rule 10b-13 claim asserted in
the proposed amended complaint. Nowhere does
the opening brief challenge the district
court's summary judgment for the defendants
on the Sec. 14(d)(7) claim. The defendants
reasonably interpreted this as an
abandonment of the Sec. 14(d)(7) claim and
did not address the issue in their briefs.
In his reply brief, the plaintiff asks the
court to review the Sec. 14(d)(7) claim "in
light of the new authority" of
Field v. Trump,
850 F.2d 938 (2d Cir.1988),
cert. denied, --- U.S. ----, 109 S.Ct. 1122,
103 L.Ed.2d 185 (1989), "and in furtherance
of the interests of justice in this case."
We normally decline to consider issues not
raised in the appellant's opening brief.
Wright v. Holbrook, 794 F.2d 1152, 1157 (6th
Cir.1986). Under the circumstances of
this case, we see no reason to depart from
that policy.
IV
We now turn to the district
court's denial of leave to file an amended
complaint. On July 21, 1987, the district
court entered a pretrial order, pursuant to
Local Rule XXI, establishing a "schedule
controlling the progress of this cause." The
order established a discovery cutoff date of
September 21, 1987, a motion cutoff date of
October 23, 1987, and a trial date of
January 19, 1988. Separate motions for
summary judgment were filed on behalf of the
Edelman defendants and the Merrill
defendants on October 23. Not until more
than six weeks later--December 7, 1987--did
Plaintiff Priddy move to amend his
complaint.
In refusing to allow amendment of
the complaint the district court made no
explicit finding of undue prejudice, but no
such finding is necessary where the extent
of the prejudice the defendant would suffer
is apparent from the record.
Duchon v. Cajon Co., 791 F.2d 43, 48 (6th
Cir.1986) (per curiam).
We believe the district court
acted within its discretion in denying leave
to amend. A party is not entitled to wait
until the discovery cutoff date has passed
and a motion for summary judgment has been
filed on the basis of claims asserted in the
original complaint before introducing
entirely different legal theories in an
amended complaint. See Addington v. Farmers'
Elevator Mut. Ins. Co., 650 F.2d 663, 667
(5th Cir. Unit A July 1981), cert. denied,
454 U.S. 1098, 102 S.Ct. 672, 70 L.Ed.2d 640
(1981); Acri v. Int'l Ass'n of Machinist &
Aerospace Workers, 781 F.2d 1393, 1398-99
(9th Cir.1986), cert. denied, 479 U.S. 816,
107 S.Ct. 73, 93 L.Ed.2d 29 (1986);
Jones v. Hamelman, 869 F.2d 1023, 1026-27
(7th Cir.1989). Mr. Priddy waited nearly
fifteen months after the filing of his
original complaint before seeking leave to
file an amended complaint based on precisely
the same facts but asserting new theories of
recovery. We agree with the Seventh Circuit
that such "[s]ubstantive amendments to the
complaint just before trial are not to be
countenanced."
Feldman v. Allegheny International, Inc.,
850 F.2d 1217, 1225 (7th Cir.1988). This
is particulary true when the motion to amend
is untimely
Page 447 under the terms of the pretrial order,
Parker v. Joe Lujan Enterprises, 848 F.2d
118, 121 (9th Cir.1988), and where no
extension has been sought or explanation
offered.
In complex cases such as this
one, it is particularly important that the
district court be allowed to enforce
deadlines--and it is particularly likely
that drastic amendments on the eve of trial
will prejudice the defendants. We think it
is clear that the wasted time and expense
that would be entailed in conducting
discovery, preparing summary judgment
motions, and preparing for trial on an
amended complaint justified the district
court's denial of leave to amend.
Ascon Properties, Inc. v. Mobil Oil Co., 866
F.2d 1149, 1160-61 (9th Cir.1989).
Putting the defendants "through the time and
expense of continued litigation on a new
theory, with the possibility of additional
discovery, would be manifestly unfair and
unduly prejudicial."
Troxel Mfg. Co. v. Schwinn Bicycle Co., 489
F.2d 968, 971 (6th Cir.1973), cert.
denied, 416 U.S. 939, 94 S.Ct. 1942, 40
L.Ed.2d 290 (1974). We express no opinion on
the merits of the claims asserted in the
proposed amended complaint.
V
Finally, we turn to the district
court's approval of the settlement in No.
88-1867. In evaluating a proposed settlement
of a class action, the district court is
required to examine the terms of the
settlement and the process by which the
settlement was arrived at, to make sure that
the terms are reasonable and that the
settlement is not the product of fraud,
overreaching, or collusion. See Clark
Equipment Co. v. Int'l Union, Allied
Industrial Workers, 803 F.2d 878, 880 (6th
Cir.1986) (per curiam), cert. denied, 480
U.S. 934, 107 S.Ct. 1574, 94 L.Ed.2d 765
(1987). The fact that the plaintiff might
have received more if the case had been
fully litigated is no reason not to approve
the settlement. Id. Our review of the
district court's approval of the settlement
in this case is governed by an abuse of
discretion standard. Id.; Laskey v. Int'l
Union (UAW), 638 F.2d 954, 957 (6th
Cir.1981) (per curiam).
Of the various shareholders who
objected to the settlement, only Mr. Priddy
has appealed. Mr. Priddy concedes that
across-the-board affirmance in Priddy would
leave him with no viable challenge to the
Warshofsky settlement. Having concluded that
summary judgment in favor of the defendants
was proper on Mr. Priddy's claims, we see
nothing unfair or inequitable about the
provisions of the Warshofsky settlement
releasing such claims.
The motions to dismiss the appeal
in No. 88-1299 are DENIED. In both Nos.
88-1299 and 88-1867, the judgment of the
district court is AFFIRMED.
* Fruehauf Corporation is incorporated
under the laws of the State of Michigan, and
the parties agree that Mr. Priddy's common
law claims (as distinguished from his
federal securities law claims) are governed
by Michigan law. Noting that the Michigan
courts generally follow Delaware law in the
absence of Michigan caselaw on particular
corporate law issues, see, e.g.,
Russ v. Federal Mogul Corp., 112 Mich.App.
449, 455 & n. 1, 316 N.W.2d 454, 457-58
& n. 1 (1982), the district court looked to
Delaware law. 679 F.Supp. at 1430. The
parties do not fault this approach. |